SINCE 1891
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2017
VOLUME CLII, ISSUE 84
Shakespeare on the Green presents ‘Macbeth’ Modern twist on classic Shakespeare play sets Macbeth in context of McCarthy era By KATHERINE BENNETT CONTRIBUTING WRITER
For their fall play this year, Shakespeare on the Green will present a rendition of Shakespeare’s famous “Macbeth.” Though the play retains its original dialogue, this performance will include a more modern twist seen through a unique lens. “We’ve set it during the McCarthy era,” said Noelle Austin ’18, the show’s assistant director. “There are a lot of themes about appearance and maintaining the personal and public persona, themes of anxiety and claustrophobia. … These themes are very enduring across eras; what’s relevant in Shakespeare’s time is relevant when you get to communism, … the ’50s and the American mindset all the way to today.” The play focuses on Macbeth’s choices and the reasoning behind them, said Grant MacFaddin ’19, director of the play. “Usually (he’s) touted as … ambitious and he has this tragic downfall,
ART & CULTURE
but what we want to do is take that a bit further; why does Macbeth feel like he has to be ambitious, why does he feel like this is something that somebody in his position should do?” “ The play i s h e av i ly implicated in themes of gender, power and selfaw are n e s s ,” said Emma Radmilovic ’18, the play’s executive producer. “Our ‘Macbeth’ translates these themes metaphorically and physically onto the stage, using interpretive moments to depict a world that is slightly outside of reality.” Though Shakespeare on the Green stages a fall production every year, it does not always fall on Family Weekend. But the director » See MACBETH, page 4
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Family Weekend tradition steeped in food, arts, culture
FALL
Past weekends have been host to mischief, bonding By ETHEL RENIA ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR
Un s e a sonably w a r m weather and a tightlypacked schedule featuring sports, theater, food and more will greet families visiting Providence this weekend. Family Weekend provides an occasion for PIA MILEAF-PATEL / HERALD students to spend time with their families and an opportunity for the student body as a whole to take a much-needed break from the relentless pace of midterm season. Though it is unclear when the very
G U I DE
first Family Weekend occurred, a previous edition of The Herald published Dec. 5, 1952 reported that Joseph Thomas of the 1954 Class Council “suggested that the class project be some sort of parent’s day with the purpose of giving fathers and mothers of undergraduates the opportunity to become better acquainted with Brown.” For the next five decades, Family Weekend has been a staple of each academic year. The tradition kicked off under the name “Freshman Parents Day” and was reserved for freshman “parents and their sons,” according to an issue of The Herald published Oct. 24, 1963. The day revolved around a luncheon, a football game against the University of Rhode Island and a series of seminars discussing humanities, social sciences, science, mathematics and engineering. Freshman Parents Day expanded to a weekend for sophomore and junior parents in 1972. “We are planning a total weekend — panels, art, sports — that will appeal to the majority of parents and students with all kinds of tastes,” said Development Officer Jack Mastroianni , according to an edition of The Herald published March 20, 1972. But 1972’s iteration of Family Weekend would not go smoothly, as pacifist and anti-war movements inspired » See FAMILY, page 6
Virtual reality systems facilitate research, education Researchers visualize data, environments, motion on large scale in new VR theater By JACKSON WELLS SENIOR STAFF WRITER
University researchers can now walk on the surface of the moon, analyze the footprints of a dinosaur and study molecular structure — all in the same place, thanks to the YURT, the new virtual reality theater at the Center for Computation and Visualization. The YURT is one of CCV’s two virtual reality systems. The second — the Cave Automatic Virtual Environment — is a cube-like structure that has seven projectors, two each on three of the sides and one on the bottom. The YURT, built after the CAVE, was developed to be much larger and more advanced than its predecessor. “If seven projectors is cool, then 70 projectors would be 10 times as cool,” said Tom Sgouros, manager of the Virtual Reality Lab, in describing the thought
SCIENCE & RESEARCH
INSIDE
process behind the YURT’s inception. The YURT is comprised of 145 mirrors that reflect transmissions from the 69 projectors that surround it. It uses 20 computers and 1.3 miles of video cable. The 2 million dollar-machine was funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation, Sgouros said. To experience the virtual reality, the user dons a headpiece equipped with motion-capture technology and walks into the center of the YURT, which is enclosed by screens. Motion capture sensors inside read the placement of the user, which in turn allows the system to adjust the roughly 100 millionpixel projections on the screens to the user’s position. This highly advanced virtual reality system opens up many new possibilities in the field of research, Sgouros said. For example, the YURT can project the surface of Mars. Where before scientists could look at contour maps to deductively discover where there were cliffs on the Martian surface, they can now use virtual reality to see it in a much more intuitive and accessible way, Sgouros said. Canyons that are believed to have been shaped by water can also be studied in this way, he noted.
JACKSON WELLS / HERALD
The YURT is surrounded by mirrors, which reflect projections onto the screens that surround the person inside. The projections conjured could be the surface of the moon, footprints of a dinosaur or a molecular structure. Using this virtual reality medium of analysis, the question “Is there water?” is replaced with “Where is the water?” according to Sgouros. The work conducted by paleontologist Stephen Gatesy concerning analysis
of dinosaur footprints also stands to benefit from this technology. The fluiddynamic model of mud that the YURT can display will allow for a better view and therefore understanding of how dinosaurs walked, Sgouros said.
The YURT will also create a more intuitive presentation of exploratory data analysis in medicine, he added. There are a number of students working on projects with researchers » See YURT, page 4
WEATHER
THURSDAY, OC TOBER 12, 2017
NEWS Karen Kroul’s new exhibit ‘Topographies of Wonder’ on display in Granoff Center
NEWS Though new NLRB could halt grad student unionization, U., SUGSE stance remains stagnant
COMMENTARY Okin ’19: Though pressure to be “chill” is prevalent, it is misguided, counterproductive
COMMENTARY Vilsan ’19: The technological addiction that many students face negatively affects education
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